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#dorothy tutin
catherinesboleyn · 7 months
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Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn
The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970)
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annabolinas · 4 months
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Keith Michell as Henry VIII and Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn in The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970)
edited by me
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dailytudors · 1 year
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Derek Godfrey as Owen Tudor with Dorothy Tutin as Catherine of Valois, Dowager Queen of England 
BBC’s The Queen and The Welshman (1966)
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earlymodernbarbie · 9 months
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Tudor Week Day 6: Fave on Screen Portrayals (in no particular order)
Keith Michell as Henry VIII
Anne Stallybrass as Jane Seymour
Annette Crosbie as Catherine of Aragon
Maria Doyle Kennedy as Catherine of Aragon
Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn
Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn
Romola Garai as Mary I
Glenda Jackson as Elizabeth I
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jezabelofthenorth · 1 year
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Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn in The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970)
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minervacasterly · 21 days
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Throwback to the beautiful Dorothy Tutin as English consorts, Queens Anne Boleyn, second wife of Henry VIII and mother to Elizabeth I, and Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I and mother to Charles II and James II.
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Out of all the Anne Boleyns, Dorothy is one of my favorites because she showed the good and bad aspects of Anne’s character and the way she conducted herself before her trial and afterwards confessed to Cranmer were very powerful and moving scenes. In my opinion, it is one of the best historical dramas about the six wives that gets better with every rewatch.
As Henrietta Maria, Dorothy Tutin also did a great job showing the only complex character in a movie that was meant to show either saintly flawless characters or inept and corrupt ones.
At the beginning we think we are going to introduce the archetypical evil woman of Cromwell’s imagination but instead we are treated to a woman who’s proud of her lineage, but also a deeply devoted, caring wife and mother who believes she’s doing what is in the best interest for her husband and her family.
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anne-the-quene · 1 year
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troublewithangels · 10 months
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royal shakespeare company's production of john whiting's the devils, c. 1961
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athenepromachos · 2 years
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OTD May 19th 1536, Anne Boleyn is beheaded by a French Swordsman at the Tower of London after being found guilty of adultery, incest and treason. Her body lies in the Chapel of St Peter Ad Vincula - may she rest in peace 👑🌹
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Dorothy Tutin and Joan Greenwood in The Importance of Being Earnest (Anthony Asquith, 1952)
Cast: Michael Redgrave, Michael Denison, Edith Evans, Joan Greenwood, Dorothy Tutin, Margaret Rutherford, Miles Malleson, Aubrey Mather. Screenplay: Anthony Asquith, based on a play by Oscar Wilde. Cinematography: Desmond Dickinson. Art direction: Carmen Dillon. Film editing: John D. Guthridge. Costume design: Beatrice Dawson. Music: Benjamin Frankel. For its marvelous sendup of the drawing room drama, the intricate craftsmanship of its plot, and the unparalleled wit of its dialogue, The Importance of Being Earnest has been called a "perfect" play. But perfection in the theater doesn't readily translate to perfection on the screen, so some of the fluidity and buoyancy of Oscar Wilde's play is lost in Anthony Asquith's otherwise admirable film. Asquith's screenplay chops up and relocates parts of some of the play's acts, and it provides a theatrical frame for the action: people taking their seats in the box of a Victorian theater and the curtain rising as a woman raises her opera glasses to view the performance. Asquith immediately breaks from that frame to show Ernest (Michael Redgrave) in his bath, a scene that doesn't exist in the play and seems to be in the film only to demonstrate that the screenwriter has "opened it up" cinematically. But almost immediately we are back in the confines of Wilde's original, as Algernon (Michael Denison) arrives and the exposition begins. The frame is a nice little trick on Asquith's part, but it feels gratuitous. The play's the thing, and for the most part Asquith sticks to it. The chief glory of his film lies in his cast, most of whom had almost certainly performed their roles on stage, given the centrality of Wilde's play in the British repertoire. And although the men are perfectly fine in their roles, the women are what matter in the film: a quartet of perfectly cast, impeccably skilled performers. Lady Bracknell typically steals every production of The Importance of Being Earnest, and with her imperious delivery Edith Evans almost makes the role her own forever -- though the part has been played by equally formidable actresses like Judi Dench and Maggie Smith. No one has ever surpassed her in summoning up the full diapason while delivering the line "A handbag?" Nor is it possible to imagine a more perfect embodiment of Miss Prism than Margaret Rutherford, who makes it quite clear that the character was entirely capable of placing the novel in the pram and the baby in the valise. Gwendolen and Cecily are not so distinctly drawn in the script: Both are cunning ditzes, vehicles for epigrams, satires on girlishness. But Joan Greenwood and Dorothy Tutin give each a discrete characterization, Tutin with her sunny pretense at naïveté, Greenwood with her mastery of a voice that can go from purr to growl in nothing flat. If I give Greenwood the edge, it's only because of the way her slight lisp makes hearing her say the name Cecily such a delight.
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catherinesboleyn · 7 months
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My top three scenes of Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn in The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970)
Requested by @annabolinas
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annabolinas · 1 year
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Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn in The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970)
edited by me; apologies for any remaining artifacts! I’ve tried to get rid of them all but it’s still somewhat visible in the first picture
First two pics are from episode 1 (”Catherine of Aragon”, written by Rosemary Anne Sisson); the rest are from episode 2 (”Anne Boleyn”, written by Nick Mccarty). Henry VIII was played by Keith Michell, Eustace Chapuys (in the second picture) by Edward Atienza, and Thomas Cranmer (in the last picture) by Bernard Hepton. 
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badgaymovies · 2 years
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The Shooting Party (1984)
The Shooting Party by #AlanBridges starring #JamesMason and #JohnGielgud, "intelligent direction and beautifully executed performances,"
ALAN BRIDGES Bil’s rating (out of 5): BBBB United Kingdom, 1984. Centurion, Edenflow, Geoff Reeve Films & Television Ltd., Castle Hill Productions, Gavin, Geoffrey Reeve and Associates, Premier. Screenplay by Julian Bond, based on the novel by Isabel Colegate. Cinematography by Fred Tammes. Produced by Geoffrey Reeve. Music by John Scott. Production Design by Morley Smith. Costume Design by Tom…
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earlymodernbarbie · 1 year
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I know it’s like sacreligious or something to not say that Natalie Dormer was the best Anne Boleyn, but like how can I say that when she’s RIGHT HERE:
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I mean LOOK at her. Dorothy Tutin as Anne Boleyn supremacy 👑👑👑
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theersatzcowboy · 2 months
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Savage Messiah (1972)
Director: Ken Russell
Cinematographer: Dick Bush
Costume Designer: Shirley Russell
Production Designer: Derek Jarman
Starring: Dorothy Tutin, Scott Antony, Helen Mirren, Lindsay Kemp, Michael Gough, and Peter Vaughan.
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